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Revealing questions demand answers
Tuesday, March 25, 2008,
Bergen Record
Last Updated Tuesday March 25,
2008, EDT 8:11 AM
"Aref Assaf: An unyielding Arab voice"
(Intriguing People, Page A-1, March 24) was indeed
compelling, and all rational, peace-loving members of society
should welcome anyone willing to have a dialogue with the enemy.
It's a wonderful start.
But I am sorry that you didn't ask Assaf two basic questions:
* Does he support a one-state solution to resolving the
Israeli-Arab conflict (code words for the eventual destruction
of Israel), or does he readily accept a two-state solution, with
both peoples living peacefully side by side?
* Why not openly admit that a significant part of Assaf's
desperate childhood had nothing at all to do with Israelis, but
rather other Arab rulers who cared not for their own people?
The article states that Assaf had a difficult childhood,
growing up in poverty in a refugee camp in the West Bank, amid
Palestinian and Israeli conflict. Assaf was born in either 1958
or 1959, meaning that he and most of his 16 siblings lived for
at least eight years under not the "occupying Israelis," but
rather the brutal Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. After the 1967
war, Jordan happily allowed Israel to annex the territories;
Jordan would no longer have to worry about these homeless,
stateless people newly known to the world, through their leader,
Yasser Arafat, as Palestinians.
Assaf's answers would speak volumes about his being a
moderate voice and someone with whom local Jews could happily
engage in dialogue.
Robert Katz
New Milford, March 23
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